MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiffs in the five above-captioned cases filed substantively identical complaints,
1
alleging that defendants AstraZ-
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Prilosec is a brand-name prescription drug used to treat heartburn and related conditions. 2 (Walgreen Co. et al. v. As traZeneca Pharms. et al., Civil Action No. 06-2084, First Am. Compl. (“FAC”) ¶ 42.) Prilosec contains the drug substance omeprazole, composed of equal parts of two mirror-image molecular structures, (S)omeprazole and (R)-omeprazole, which are transformed into an active drug in the parietal cells of the stomach of a person who ingests the substance. (Id. ¶¶ 53-54.) AstraZeneca obtained a patent for Prilosec in 1981, and began marketing 20 mg Prilosec capsules in September 1989 after obtaining approval from the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”). 3 By 1999, prescription Prilosec was producing $4 billion in revenue to AstraZeneca. The Prilosec patent expired in October 2001, and a company not involved in this case first marketed a generic equivalent of Prilosec in December 2002. AstraZeneca still manufactures and markets its prescription Prilosec capsules. In June 2003, the FDA approved an OTC version of prescription Prilosec, and granted AstraZeneca exclusivity in that market through June 2006 after AstraZeneca conducted and submitted safety studies to the FDA.
AstraZeneca also owns the patent for, manufactures, and markets the brand-name prescription drug Nexium. Nexium contains the drug substance esomeprazole, or (S)-omeprazole.
(Id.
¶53.) The FDA approved Nexium for sale in February 2001, just eight months before the Prilosec patent expired. The Nexium patent does not expire until 2014, and Nexium is not
Based on sales data, plaintiffs calculate that in 2002 — the year after Nexium hit the market — Nexium siphoned off one-third of the prescriptions that would have been written for Prilosec if Nexium had not been an alternative. (See id. ¶¶ 63, 65.) Plaintiffs also project that if Nexium had not gone to market, the manufacturers of generic substitutes to prescription Prilo-sec would have far more than their current 30% of the market, and consumers would have collectively saved $11.5 billion by the end of the year 2006. (Id. ¶ 68.)
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that AstraZeneca “switch[ed] the market from Prilosec, which now has generic competition, to a virtually identical drug, Nexi-um, which does not [have generic competition.]” (Id. ¶ 1.) Asserting that there is almost no difference between Nexium and Prilosec, and that there is no pharmacody-namic reason why a dose of (S)-omepra-zole, i.e., Nexium, would interact with the stomach’s parietal cells any differently than would an equal dose of omeprazole, i.e., Prilosec (id. ¶ 54), plaintiffs contend that this switching is exclusionary and violates § 2 of the Sherman Act. They also allege that to effectuate this market switch, AstraZeneca used distortion and misdirection in marketing, promoting and detailing Nexium. (See id. ¶¶ 69, 90-95, 116, 122.) In addition, plaintiffs contend that AstraZeneca engaged in prohibited exclusionary conduct when it introduced OTC Prilosec and obtained a grant of exclusivity for three years from the FDA. (See id. ¶¶ 96-103.)
DISCUSSION
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) authorizes dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). A court considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss assumes all factual allegations to be true, even if they are doubtful.
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
— U.S. -, -,
The antitrust laws were enacted to protect competition, not competitors.
Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
Section 2 of the Sherman Act makes it a felony to “monopolize or attempt to monopolize ... any part of the trade or commerce among the several States....” 15 U.S.C. § 2. “The offense of monopolization has two elements: ‘(1) the possession of monopoly power in the relevant market and (2) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.’ ”
United States v. Microsoft Corp.,
Plaintiffs allege that AstraZeneca engaged in exclusionary conduct “by introducing Nexium, a drug virtually identical to and no more effective than Prilosec” (FAC ¶¶ 116, 122), and “switching the market from Prilosec, which now has generic competition, to a virtually identical drug, Nexium, which does not [have generic competition.]”
(Id.
¶ 1.) To make their case, plaintiffs contend that AstraZeneca’s conduct is analogous to conduct held unlawful in
Microsoft,
Plaintiffs argue that because Nexium is protected by a patent and not superior to Prilosec, AstraZeneca’s conduct is exclusionary. Plaintiffs are not able to show that enjoying the benefits of patent protection is exclusionary conduct under § 2. “[A] patent is presumptively not a monopoly ... [and] is no different than any other property right ... [such as] ownership of an airplane or pipeline [that] excludes others from using them.... Further, the Patent Act creates a federal right to exclude others from practicing the patent.... As a result, antitrust must tread lightly.” Ar-eeda & Hovenkamp, § 704a at 151. See also id. § 706d at 164-66 (advising that § 2 antitrust remedies should not be applied to monopolists who introduce new products under patents or, presumably, other official grants of exclusivity).
Plaintiffs have also not identified any antitrust law that requires a product new on the market — with or without a patent— to be superior to existing products. Antitrust law holds, and has long held, to the contrary. Courts and juries are not tasked with determining which product among several is superior. Those determinations are left to the marketplace. New products are not capable of affecting competitors’ market share unless consumers prefer the new product, regardless of whether that product is superior, equivalent, or inferior to existing products. “[N]o one can determine with any reasonable assurance whether one product is ‘superior’ to another. Preference is a matter of individual taste. The only question that can be answered is whether there is sufficient demand for a particular product to make its production worthwhile,' and the response, so long as the free choice of consumers is preserved, can only be inferred from the reaction of the market.”
Berkey Photo, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
Plaintiffs also complain that when AstraZeneca transferred its considerable sales efforts from Nexium to Prilosec, it used distortion in its efforts to persuade doctors and other medical professionals that Nexium offered advantages to Prilosec and in its advertising directed to lay persons. Plaintiffs have not identified any antitrust law that prohibits market switching through sales persuasion short of false representations or fraud,
6
or any court that has identified such conduct as exclusionary for purposes of § 2 of the Sherman Act. The law allows AstraZeneca “to bathe [its] cause in the best light possible. Advertising that emphasizes a producer’s strengths and minimizes its weaknesses does not, at least unless it amounts to deception, constitute anticompetitive conduct violative of § 2.”
Berkey Photo,
Indeed, plaintiffs here have not identified an antitrust injury that they have suffered. They complain that AstraZene-ca’s conduct cost them sales of their generic substitutes. The fact that a new product siphoned off some of the sales from the old product and, in turn, depressed sales of the generic substitutes for the old product, does not create an antitrust cause of action. Simply stated, plaintiffs have not alleged facts showing that AstraZeneca “interfere[d] with the[ir] freedom to compete.”
Johnson,
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs have not pled facts that support a reasonable inference that they have
An appropriate order accompanies this memorandum opinion.
Notes
. The plaintiffs in each case are as follows: Walgreen Co., Eckerd Corp., Maxi Drug, Inc., The Kroger Co., New Albertson’s, Inc., Safeway, Inc., Hy-Vee, Inc. and American Sales Company, Inc. in Civil Action No. 06-2084; Rite Aid Corp. and Rite Aid Headquarters Corp. in Civil Action No. 06-2089; Meijer, Inc. and Meijer Distribution, Inc. in Civil Action No. 06-2155; Louisiana Wholesale Drug
. These conditions are also known as erosive esophogitis and symptomatic gastroesopha-geal reflux disease.
. AstraZeneca was not the sole manufacturer in the market for prescription treatment of heartburn and related conditions, however. Prevacid, Protonix, and Aciphex are prescription treatments manufactured by others for the same medical conditions. (See Mot. to Dismiss at 12.)
. “Detailing" in the retail pharmaceutical business refers to the practice of sending company representatives to doctors’ offices to distribute samples and promotional materials and information.
. Tying, which is not alleged against AstraZ-eneca in this case, is classic exclusionary conduct. See Philip R. Areeda & Herbert Hoven-kamp, 3A Antitrust Law § 776c at 242-53 (2d ed. 2002) ("Areeda & Hovenkamp 2d ed.”) (discussing the tying presented in the Microsoft case); see id. generally, Ch. 7D-4 at 228-67; (discussing various issues involved in vertical integration).
. Plaintiffs allege that the sales persuasion directed to medical professionals and lay persons was distorted in multiple respects. They have not, however, asserted a claim for fraud.
